14 reviews
The consistent run of good episodes that have made up this first half of the second season continues. As the show mixes some back story with the current plot, this time to focus on the love between Judy and her adopted father.
Trapped down the well, and with his abdomen pierced by a metal fragment, John (Toby Stephens) thinks back over his relationship with his eldest daughter Judy (Taylor Russell). Judy is racing back to her father when her rover breaks down and she is forced to run several miles to try and get him the medicine he needs. Meanwhile, on the Resolute, Penny (Mina Sundwell) takes exception to Dr Smith's (Parker Posey) newfound freedom and begins to work on bringing her down.
The thing that struck me in this episode, more than it has in any of the others so far, is how Toby Stephens, so often the villain, or at the very least anti-hero, has made John Robinson into a great TV dad. For the first time (that I can remember) we learned something about Judy's biological father, an astronaut who passed away very early in her life. There are then several flashbacks showing John supporting her at various points in her youth. Juxtaposed with the (admittedly unlikely) threat to John's life, it was all quite moving. Particularly Judy's emotional speech to keep him fighting.
Ben (who increasingly is looking like turning out to be a villain) travels with Maureen and Will to try and find O.G Robot. Whilst Penny recruits her love interest Vijay to try and bring down Dr Smith before another game changing twist at the end.
Another decent, if as others have pointed out somewhat derivative, episode for a show that's found its feet at last.
Trapped down the well, and with his abdomen pierced by a metal fragment, John (Toby Stephens) thinks back over his relationship with his eldest daughter Judy (Taylor Russell). Judy is racing back to her father when her rover breaks down and she is forced to run several miles to try and get him the medicine he needs. Meanwhile, on the Resolute, Penny (Mina Sundwell) takes exception to Dr Smith's (Parker Posey) newfound freedom and begins to work on bringing her down.
The thing that struck me in this episode, more than it has in any of the others so far, is how Toby Stephens, so often the villain, or at the very least anti-hero, has made John Robinson into a great TV dad. For the first time (that I can remember) we learned something about Judy's biological father, an astronaut who passed away very early in her life. There are then several flashbacks showing John supporting her at various points in her youth. Juxtaposed with the (admittedly unlikely) threat to John's life, it was all quite moving. Particularly Judy's emotional speech to keep him fighting.
Ben (who increasingly is looking like turning out to be a villain) travels with Maureen and Will to try and find O.G Robot. Whilst Penny recruits her love interest Vijay to try and bring down Dr Smith before another game changing twist at the end.
Another decent, if as others have pointed out somewhat derivative, episode for a show that's found its feet at last.
- southdavid
- Jan 28, 2020
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- kender-725-358425
- Dec 26, 2019
- Permalink
Certainly not the best episode. This is probably because the overall story of the season hardly evolves with this episode. Instead, the usual scheme is run through again: obstacles and insoluble dangers constantly appear, which are cleared out of the way. Sometimes you think: you can't have that much bad luck in one Single day. The actual story (including the Flashbacks) about John and Judy is predictable and not very inspired, but - also to be mentioned - very well filmed. As always, the special effects are top, cinema level.
- larosaj-26666
- Dec 26, 2019
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- larosaj-26666
- Dec 25, 2019
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The series is clearly getting better and better,but i hate they removed the intro.
- marian_the_nightman
- Jan 6, 2020
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The father-daughter relationship between Judy and John really got me in the feels. I'm not crying, you're crying! It's these humanizing character-centric plots that really make a show special because it's often tried but not always this well executed, well scripted and well acted.
I liked the emotion in this episode although it did get silly at times. Holding interest but only slight!
- natashaconnor-91924
- Dec 30, 2019
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- Peripheral-Vision
- Apr 11, 2025
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- captain_astronaut
- Feb 15, 2020
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- mcconvilleandrewmcconville
- Dec 30, 2019
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- csteinmayer-25141
- Jan 4, 2020
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